Calcium is essential to life. The body acts to keep calcium levels in the blood
within a very narrow range by regulating absorption of calcium from the gut
and from bone, and to a lesser extent by regulating losses of calcium in urine.
Unfortunately, these regulating mechanisms do not adequately preserve bone in
older people in developed countries. Measures to promote bone health are important
throughout life to assist in building bone and to reduce later losses of bone.

In all developed countries with ageing populations, thinning of bones due to
loss of calcium is a major public health issue. As bones thin, risk of fracture
increases. Hip fracture is a particularly devastating injury, with many people
dying within a year of suffering such a fracture. Osteoporosis and vertebral
fractures give rise to the familiar loss of height with age and to the painfully
familiar bent over stance of many elderly people.

Preventing such fractures is one of the most important public health issues
for the 21st century, as populations across the world grow older and more prosperous.
There are three main approaches to tackling this problem: drugs, diet and lifestyle.
This paper will consider diet and, to a lesser extent, physical activity and
sun exposure.

About 1.0 g of protein per kg of body weight per day is widely accepted as
an adequate intake for most people over the age of 10, though athletes may require
about 1.5 g per kg per day.

About 1.25 g of phosphorus per day is also widely accepted as an adequate intake
for most people. Most people in developed countries get adequate protein and
phosphate, though some elderly individuals do not. Elderly people may need to
emphasise foods rich in these nutrients as their calorie consumption declines.

Calcium intakes of 800-1500 mg per day are considered adequate by various expert
bodies. However, calcium requirements cannot be considered separately from other
dietary components, particularly those determining calcium losses.

Reducing calcium losses from the body

Calcium is lost from the body in urine, gut secretions and sweat. The key to
avoiding bone loss is to ensure that calcium absorbed from food in the gut balances
the losses. Otherwise, the body will take calcium from bone to maintain the
required level of calcium in the blood. The body contains about 1 kg of calcium
in the bones. If calcium losses exceed absorption from the gut by just 30 mg
per day, 1% of the calcium in the bones will be lost each year.

In people following typical North American and European diets, calcium loss
is driven with approximately equal importance by four dietary components: high
sodium, high protein, low potassium and low bicarbonate intakes.

Increasing sodium intake from 1000 to 4000 mg per day causes an additional
52 mg of calcium loss per day.

Increasing protein intake from 40 to 100 g per day increases losses by 66
mg per day.

Decreasing potassium intake from 8000 to 2000 mg per day increases losses
by 31 mg per day.

Decreasing bicarbonate intake from 100 to 20 mmol per day increases losses
by 32 mg per day.

These entirely plausible changes in daily intake of the four key components
can therefore cause calcium losses from the body to increase from about 60 mg
per day to about 240 mg per day. Fractional calcium absorption (the fraction
of dietary calcium absorbed from the gut) decreases as calcium intake increases,
so each successive increase in calcium intake has less effect. For a typical
55 year old woman, the required calcium intake to meet 60 mg per day of losses
would be just 200 mg per day, while the required intake to meet losses of 240
mg per day would be 2300 mg per day. Appendix 1 explains the calculation of
these figures.

In children, adolescents and younger adults, calcium absorption is more efficient
and adapts better to increased losses. In these groups the beneficial effect
of increasing calcium intake on calcium balance is stronger, due to better average
absorption, and the adverse effect of increased losses is less, due to better
adaptation of absorption to increased losses. Older men and older women show
a decline in absorption (Institute of Medicine, 1997; Agnusdei, 1998; Barger-Lux,
1995), with average fractional calcium absorption being about 30-40% lower at
eighty than at thirty. In this briefing paper the analysis will focus on adults
with an average age of about 55. Any diet adequate to support bone health in
older adults will be adequate for younger people, but in the very old reducing
calcium losses will be even more important than this analysis indicates, as
calcium absorption will be lower.

Calcium requirements to balance a given calcium loss will also be higher for
those with relatively low calcium absorption for their age. Such individuals
are at particularly high risk of osteoporosis (Need, 1998; Ensrud, 2000). About
one in ten postmenopausal women show absorption more than 40% below the average
(Heaney, 1986) and are therefore at particularly high risk of bone loss. As
already noted, the fraction of calcium absorbed also declines as overall calcium
intake increases. A useful way of examining foods is to evaluate their net impact
on calcium balance (calcium absorbed from the gut minus calcium losses) at a
given level of calcium intake. To fully appreciate the impact of a food on high
risk individuals its effect should be evaluated with calcium absorption 40%
below typical levels.

Table 1 shows the effect of some representative foods on calcium balance, in
mg of calcium per 100 g of food, at calcium intakes between 500 and 1000 mg
per day and between 1000 and 1500 mg per day, both for typical calcium absorption
and for 40% reduced absorption (high risk).

Table 1: Effect of representative foods on calcium balance

Foods can be categorised based on whether they are high or low in calcium and
whether they increase or decrease calcium losses. The ideal foods for bone health
are foods that are high in calcium and reduce calcium losses. Adding these foods
to the diet will benefit everyone, including those requiring high calcium intakes
and having low absorption. Green leafy vegetables such as kale and spring greens
are the best example of such foods. In contrast, all dairy foods increase losses
of calcium as well as providing calcium, so their effectiveness declines dramatically
with increased calcium intakes and with decreased absorption. Foods such as
meat, fish and eggs, which are low in calcium but cause high losses, reduce
everyone's calcium balance uniformly, while low calcium foods which reduce losses,
such as peppers, bananas and oranges, provide everyone with a modest boost.

For an individual trying to improve calcium balance, fruit and vegetables are
the best foods to add, as they are rich in potassium and bicarbonate which reduce
calcium losses. Adding 100 g of each of the five vegetables and fruits at the
bottom of Table 1 would add 400 mg of calcium to the diet and 30 to 35 mg to
the calcium balance of a high risk person with low absorption, or 40 to 50 mg
for a person with typical absorption. In contrast, a pint of cow's milk would
add about 700 mg of calcium to the diet, but would improve calcium balance by
only 13 to 22 mg and 35 to 50 mg respectively. 100 g of cheddar cheese would
also add 700 mg of calcium to the diet, but would actually take away 11 to 4
mg of calcium from the high risk person while adding only 7 to 19 mg to calcium
balance for the person with average risk. In all cases, the benefit is less
at higher calcium intakes. More calcium is a good thing, but the package it
comes in is critical, particularly for individuals at high risk.

Although increased protein intake increases calcium losses, an adequate protein
intake is essential to provide the ingredients for muscle and bone, without
which the body will degenerate. Consuming less than the recommended amount of
protein in order to reduce calcium loss is therefore a false economy. However,
the choice of protein source can make a great deal of difference. A person trying
to increase protein intake using chicken or fish will lose 25 mg of calcium
from their body for every 100 g eaten. In contrast, a 100 g portion of beans
(by dry weight) has an approximately neutral effect on calcium balance while
providing the same amount of protein.

Reducing salt intake by 5 g per day will eliminate 2000 mg of sodium, reducing
calcium losses by about 35 mg per day.

Reducing sodium intake; increasing potassium and bicarbonate intake from fruit
and vegetables; meeting protein needs from legumes rather than meat, fish or
egg; and getting calcium from green leafy vegetables rather than dairy products
can reduce the losses of calcium from the body substantially. As already noted,
if calcium losses exceed calcium absorption by just 30 mg per day about 1% of
bone calcium will be lost each year. Reducing calcium losses while consuming
ample calcium (about 1000 mg per day) provides a robust foundation for bone
health by making it easier for the body to replenish its losses from the diet.

Making absorption of calcium from the gut easy

Faced with a given calcium loss, the body will try to maintain calcium levels
in the blood by taking calcium from the gut or from bone. If calcium is readily
available from food in the gut, the body is less likely to remove it from bone,
so bone loss will be less.

The body maintains blood levels of calcium primarily by adjusting parathyroid
hormone (PTH). Increased PTH increases the production of calcitriol from calcidiol
(stored vitamin D) as well as directly stimulating removal of calcium from bone.
Calcitriol stimulates absorption of calcium both from the gut and from bone.
Calcidiol has similar effects to calcitriol, though these effects are weaker
at normal concentrations.

If calcium intake is sufficient to meet calcium losses with a low fractional
calcium absorption and vitamin D is adequate, the body will show low PTH, moderate
to high calcidiol and low calcitriol. This combination favours calcium being
taken from the gut rather than from bone and indicates ideal calcium metabolism.

If vitamin D is adequate but calcium intake is not ample, the body will show
moderate PTH, moderate to high calcidiol and high calcitriol. This is undesirable
as calcium is likely to be absorbed from bone as well as from the gut and bone
loss may be significant.

If vitamin D is inadequate, the body will show high PTH, low calcidiol and
low calcitriol. In this case, calcium will be lost from bone. Severely inadequate
vitamin D levels manifest as rickets in children and as osteomalacia in adults.

Caffeine reduces absorption of calcium from the gut. One cup of caffeine-containing
coffee per day reduces calcium balance by about 4 mg (Barger-Lux, 1995b). This
is a very significant reduction in older adults, leading to about 0.1% loss
of bone per year if not compensated for by some other means.

Optimal bone health requires adequate stored vitamin D (calcidiol) and magnesium
combined with sufficient calcium intake to allow calcium losses to be met from
the gut even with a low fractional absorption.

Making absorption of calcium from bone difficult

The other side of ensuring that calcium comes from the gut and not from bone
is making bone resistant to calcium loss. When the body demands more calcium
to balance losses, by raising PTH and calcitriol, both the gut and the bone
will respond. Making it easy to absorb calcium from the gut helps to protect
bone. Helping bone to resist demands for more calcium is just as important.

Bone is built by osteoblast cells and demolished by osteoclast cells in an
ongoing cycle of renewal and repair. Strengthening osteoblast activity relative
to osteoclast activity makes bone more resistant to demands for release of calcium
to the blood. Increased resistance means that more of the calcium losses will
be met by absorption from the gut and less by absorption from bone.

During childhood and adolescence, growth hormones strongly stimulate osteoblast
activity, promoting a positive calcium balance. Growth hormones decline with
age. Particularly severe declines in bone growth hormones occur if dietary protein,
phosphate or zinc become inadequate. Oestrogen levels also decline with age
in both men and women, with a particularly dramatic drop in women at menopause.
Oestrogen promotes a positive calcium balance in many ways, including making
bone more resistant to releasing calcium in response to increased PTH, reducing
urinary calcium loss and possibly increasing calcium absorption (Nordin, 1999;
Riggs, 1998). These age-related changes shift the balance in favour of osteoclast
activity with age, making bone loss in response to calcium losses more likely.

A key component of bone is osteocalcin, a protein produced by osteoblasts.
Osteocalcin must be carboxylated to bind most effectively with calcium. Elevated
undercarboxylated osteocalcin (ucOC) strongly predicts fracture risk and is
associated with both decreased bone density and weaker bones at a given density
(Weber, 2001). Elevated ucOC can be readily corrected by increased vitamin K
intake. Vitamin K is found in large quantities in green leafy vegetables and
broccoli and in the fermented soy product, natto. Absorption of vitamin K from
green leafy vegetables is enhanced by the presence of fat, e.g. from a salad
dressing, cooking oil or other accompanying food. Booth (2000) found high vitamin
K intake (250 micrograms per day) to be associated with a 65% reduction in fracture
risk. 250 micrograms of vitamin K can be obtained from 100 g of broccoli or
green cabbage, 200 g of lettuce or just 40 g of kale (Shearer, 1996). The beneficial
effect of vitamin K is particularly notable in postmenopausal women who are
not receiving oestrogen treatment, suggesting that it counters some of the adverse
effects of declining oestrogen levels (Feskanich, 1999). In those postmenopausal
women showing particularly high calcium losses a 1000 microgram vitamin K supplement
resulted in a marked reduction in urinary calcium losses (Knapen, 1989). A 1000
microgram supplement is equivalent to about 150 g of kale. Vitamin K may also
be important, together with ample calcium intake, in ensuring a beneficial impact
of increased levels of vitamin D (Feskanich, 1999).

Blood pH is also a significant factor in osteoblast and osteoclast activity.
As pH drops, the balance is shifted in favour of osteoclasts and bone density
declines (Bushinsky, 2000; Giannini, 1998). Blood pH decreases with age, as
kidney efficiency declines, and is sensitive to the balance between acid and
bicarbonate from the diet (Sebastian, 1994; Frassetto, 1996).

Consuming alkaline foods (typically high in potassium relative to protein)
increases blood pH, thereby shifting the balance in favour of the osteoblasts.
However, low protein diets have the opposite effect as they cause a decline
in growth hormones. It is therefore very important to maintain adequate protein
intakes while using plenty of alkaline foods such as fruits and vegetables to
balance the acid from the protein. Vegetable sources of protein (other than
grains and some nuts) are usually alkaline, while animal sources of protein
are usually acid. Milk is approximately neutral, but cheese is even more acid
than meat or fish.

Table 2 shows the contribution of different types of food to net alkali. For
the detail of the calculation of net alkali see Appendix 1. Acid foods show
a negative value for net alkali.

Table 2: The effect of representative foods on net alkali

Retinol consumption probably has an adverse effect in older adults by stimulating
release of calcium from bone and also by interfering with absorption of calcium
from the gut (Binkley, 2000; Johansson, 2001). Major studies in both Scandinavia
and the USA have linked retinol intakes above 1500 micrograms per day with an
almost doubled risk of hip fracture compared with retinol intakes below 500
micrograms per day (Melhus, 1998, Feskanich, 2002). Both studies found that
plant carotenes, from which the body can make its own vitamin A as required,
were not associated with increased risk. Retinol is found in animal products,
particularly liver and cod liver oil. It is also found in some fortified foods,
including most milk sold in Sweden and the USA, and many multivitamin supplements.
Plant carotenes are abundant in carrots, dark green leafy vegetables and red
peppers.

Omega-3 fatty acids may have a positive effect in shifting the balance in favour
of osteoblasts (Kruger, 1998; Requirand, 2000; Watkins, 2001).

Physical activity has a huge impact in promoting osteoblast activity, thus
encouraging the body to take the necessary calcium from the gut rather than
the bones. For a given dietary intake, greater physical activity such as walking,
running, racket sports and weight training will promote the development and
retention of bone (Uusi-Rasi, 1998; Wolff, 1999). In the face of high physical
activity, the body will follow the path of least resistance and take extra calcium
from the gut rather than from bone.

The optimal combination is a diet requiring a relatively low fractional absorption
of calcium to balance losses and a combination of physical activity and dietary
factors promoting osteoblast activity so as to make the bones resistant to the
body's demands for calcium.

Promoting bone strength independently of bone mass

Bone mass is not the end of the story. A large, dense bone is usually a strong
bone, but is not necessarily so. As discussed above, increased vitamin K intake
is associated with reduced fracture risk independent of bone density. Magnesium
in bone promotes a fine crystalline structure and greater bone strength, so
ample magnesium intake may enhance bone strength (Sojka, 1995).

Recommendations

Eat plenty of low oxalate high calcium green leafy vegetables

Dairy products are not the ideal food for bone health. 100 g of a low oxalate
high calcium green leafy vegetable such as kale, turnip greens or spring greens
(young cabbage without a heart) will have at least as much beneficial effect
on calcium balance as 200 g of milk or 100 g of cheddar cheese. Using the green
stuff instead of the white stuff avoids the adverse effects of dairy fat on
cardiovascular health. Dark green leafy vegetables will also protect and strengthen
bone by raising blood pH and providing vitamin K and vitamin C. They are a good
source of plant carotenes which meet the body's needs for vitamin A safely and
naturally. Green leafy vegetables are also high in folate, which is very beneficial
to general health. It is hard to imagine a food more supportive of bone health
than kale or spring greens.

Some vegetables such as spinach, beet greens, purslane, amaranth and rhubarb
are high in oxalate, which hinders absorption of their calcium. Use of these
foods is not harmful to bone, but their effective calcium content is only about
20% of the measured content.

Reduce sodium intake

If you use salt, substitute one of the widely available low sodium alternatives
containing at least twice as much potassium as sodium by weight. Anyone relying
on iodised salt as a source of iodine should take a 150 microgram iodine supplement
three times a week if the low sodium substitute does not provide iodine.

Use low sodium bread or consume bread moderately, as bread is a major source
of sodium. Some low sodium breads are also fortified with calcium.

Use herbs and spices instead of salt and salty pickles. There are often similar
products in terms of taste with very different salt levels.

Get at least 600 mg of calcium per day from calcium rich foods or supplements

Almonds, carob and molasses each provide about 250 mg of calcium per 100 g.
While these foods are too concentrated to consume in large amounts, they can
make a useful contribution. These sources of plant calcium also provide alkali
to boost blood pH. In contrast, milk is neutral and cheese is acid.

Tofu is high in calcium only if calcium has been used in preparing it. Some
tofu is highly salted. Tofu can therefore vary from substantially increasing
calcium balance to substantially decreasing it. The calcium content of tahini
is also very variable, ranging from 140 to 960 mg per 100 g. The amounts of
calcium and sodium in these foods should be checked on the labels and not taken
for granted. There should be at least as much calcium as sodium for a beneficial
effect on calcium balance.

Calcium-fortified foods or calcium supplements provide another source of calcium.
Calcium supplements are at least as natural as dairy products or soy products
as humans have consumed calcium carbonate, introduced via stone grinding of
grain, for about 10,000 years. If phosphate intakes are low (unusual for vegans),
calcium phosphate may be preferable to calcium carbonate or calcium citrate.
Calcium carbonate should always be consumed with meals. If stomach acid is low
something other than carbonate should be used.

600 mg of calcium per day from calcium rich foods, plus calcium from other
foods, should give an adequate calcium intake.

Get an adequate protein intake

This is mainly an issue for elderly people and others with a relatively low
calorie intake (less than 30 kcal per kg of body weight), but can be of critical
importance. If protein intake is inadequate, the body lacks the building blocks
for muscle and bone, and growth hormones which stimulate muscle and bone building
will decline to undesirable levels. A cup (250 ml) of soya milk a day provides
about 8g of protein and can make a significant contribution to maintaining an
adequate protein intake. Most dry beans contain about 25 g of protein per 100
g. Wheat is higher in protein than rice and potatoes, and using nuts and seeds
rather than oils and fats will boost protein intake. Nuts which are high in
monounsaturated fat, such as almonds, hazelnuts (filberts) and cashews, are
ideal as they will also promote cardiovascular health. Almonds are the most
beneficial for bone health as they have the most positive effect on calcium
balance.

Maintain an adequate store of vitamin D

Get frequent short exposures of skin to sun whenever the sun is at least 30
degrees above the horizon. At latitudes above about 50 degrees North, this is
not practical from November to March, and vitamin D stores will decay substantially
during this "vitamin D winter". Within 30 degrees of the equator there
is no vitamin D winter. A fifteen minute exposure to sun is ample to boost vitamin
D while avoiding damaging sunburn.

For the part of the year when such sun exposure is not possible, do one of
the following:

take a mid-winter holiday somewhere sunny and expose skin to sun frequently;

use a sunlamp with at least 3% of its energy between 290 nanometres and
315 nanometres once a week, being careful to avoid overexposure;

take 10 micrograms of vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol) per day.

Make unrefined plant foods your main source of protein

Legume and dairy proteins have a lower sulphur amino acid content (the active
component in causing calcium loss) per gram of protein than meat, fish, egg
or grain proteins, and therefore cause less calcium loss for a given protein
intake. Meat, fish and eggs have a pronounced negative effect on calcium balance.
Grains have a moderately negative effect. Some highly processed plant protein
sources, such as certain soy protein isolates, have an adverse effect on calcium
balance due to loss of beneficial minerals and addition of sodium during processing.
Highly salted nuts also have an adverse effect. Of the animal protein sources,
only milk and yoghurt can be expected to have a consistently positive effect
on calcium balance. Most plant protein sources (fruits, vegetables, legumes
and many nuts and seeds) come in a nutritional package which has a positive
or neutral effect on calcium balance.

These probably promote osteoblast (bone-building) activity. The simplest way
for vegans to top up omega-3s is to consume 1-2 teaspoons of flaxseed oil per
day.

Limit caffeine consumption

Caffeine has been shown to reduce calcium absorption. Low caffeine teas, such
as Redbush (Rooibosch), provide a tasty and healthful alternative.

Get your vitamin A from plant carotenes, not from retinol

This allows the body to regulate production of vitamin A and avoids the probable
ill effects of retinol on bone. Note that cow's milk is fortified with retinol
in Sweden, the USA and some other countries. Some vegan supplements contain
retinol or related compounds - ingredients beginning with "retin"
should be avoided. Good sources of plant carotenes include carrots, pumpkin,
sweet potato, dark green leafy vegetables, such as kale, spring greens and spinach,
and red peppers. 100 grams per day of any combination of these will meet vitamin
A requirements safely and naturally.

Finally, don't forget physical activity: just as exercise helps to build
and maintain muscle, it also helps to build and maintain bone

Recommendations on any health issue need to be consistent with overall health.

Increased calcium or vitamin D appears to reduce risk of colorectal cancer
and may also reduce risk of breast cancer. Increased vitamin D may also reduce
the risk of prostate cancer and auto-immune diseases.

However, there is a consistent association between increased milk consumption
and increased risk of prostate cancer. Giovannucci (1998) suggested that this
association may reflect, at least in part, an adverse effect of calcium. The
main evidence for this suggestion was that high use of calcium from supplements
(more than 900 mg per day) was associated with an increased risk of prostate
cancer even at moderate intakes of dietary calcium. Use of calcium supplements
providing 1-900 mg per day, with dietary calcium intakes below 1000 mg per day,
was associated with a very modest decrease in risk which may have been due to
chance. Looking at combined dietary and supplementary calcium, a significant
increase in risk (200% greater than for low calcium intakes) was observed only
for total calcium intakes above 2000 mg per day. As discussed in Appendix 2,
calcium intakes above 2000 mg may have adverse effects even from the point of
view of bone health. The recommendations in this paper aim for a calcium intake
of about 1000 mg, so the results of Giovannucci give no cause for concern.

Increased consumption of foods rich in plant carotenes is associated with reduced
risk of cancer.

Increased consumption of omega-3 fatty acids, particularly from plant sources,
is strongly associated with reduced risk of heart disease. Omega-3 fatty acids
may also reduce risk of depression and schizophrenia.

Increased consumption of unrefined plant foods, particularly fruit and vegetables,
nuts, seeds and whole grains, is associated with wide-ranging health benefits
and can be expected to promote a longer and healthier life.

Two serious errors in public policy on bone health

Having set out the basis of bone health, it is appropriate to reflect on public
policy.

The first serious error in public policy is the undeserved pre-eminence accorded
to calcium in relation to bone health. Calcium is a very good thing, but increasing
calcium intake from 500 mg per day to 1500 mg per day will add less than 90
mg per day to the calcium balance of most older adults, and less than 50 mg
per day to the calcium balance of many such adults. 10 g of salt per day will
take about 70 mg per day away from calcium balance. 4000 mg of extra potassium
from a diet rich in vegetables, fruits and other unrefined plant foods will
add 60 mg per day to calcium balance. At the same time, the alkali from such
foods will help bone keep its calcium where it belongs. Vitamin K from green
leafy vegetables and broccoli will do the same and promote stronger bones at
the same time.

The second serious error is equating calcium with dairy products. Dairy products
are not the best source of calcium as they promote calcium losses at the same
time as increasing calcium intake. This is particularly true of cheese, which
will degrade the calcium balance of individuals most at risk of osteoporosis:
the very old and people with relatively poor absorption of calcium. In terms
of bone health, dairy products fortified with retinol are a poisoned offering.

Heaney (2000d) provides a particularly clear illustration of the current tendency
to equate calcium with dairy:

In general, antidairy groups are forced logically to take an anticalcium
stance (not just an antidairy stance). Since in the diets of the industrialized
nations 65-80% of calcium intake comes from dairy products to be against dairy
forces one to be against calcium.

Yet in the same article Heaney states:

It is now fairly generally accepted that the diets of evolving hominids exhibited
high calcium densities. Both nonhuman primates today and contemporary hunter-gatherer
peoples regularly consume diets with calcium densities above 2 mmol/100 kcal
[2000 mg per day]. Much of this calcium would have come from vegetable sources

In fact, the most authoritative source (Eaton, 1991) states that about 90%
of that high calcium intake came from plants. A high intake of vegetables, fruits,
roots and flowers also provided abundant potassium, alkali, magnesium, vitamin
K and vitamin C, all in quantities far above modern norms. Salt was notably
absent.

Nutritional science is in its infancy with regard to the interactions between
these nutrients, but it is clear that all of them, not just calcium, contribute
to bone health and other aspects of health. While many modern cultivated foods
are sadly much less rich in calcium than the wild plants with which we evolved,
green leafy vegetables are an exception and therefore of particular importance
for modern humans.

Human use of dairy products is a recent and unnecessary development. A diet
rich in vegetables, fruits and root crops provides the best path back to healthy
bones.

Appendices

The appendices to this paper provide important supporting material.

Appendix 1 sets out the model used for evaluating calcium balance. This is
a novel synthesis of research results over the past twenty years. This appendix
underpins the conclusions of the paper.

Appendix 2 reviews the evidence from long term supplementation trials with
calcium or vitamin D and concludes that the evidence for a beneficial effect
on bone health from increased calcium intakes, not exceeding 2000 mg per day,
is very strong. This review provides additional support for the recommendations
to include at least 600 mg per day of calcium from calcium-rich foods or supplements
and to ensure an adequate store of vitamin D.

Appendix 3 reviews the results of prospective epidemiological studies on dietary
calcium and bone health, with particular emphasis on Feskanich (1997, 1998)
as these studies have been the subject of recent controversy. This review concludes
that findings of increased fracture risk with increased dietary (dairy) calcium
intake in these studies, in contrast to Holbrook (1988), reflects

the high retinol content of low fat milk in the USA;

distortion of the results due to people at high risk of osteoporosis consuming
more dairy products;

increased use of cheese compared with milk.

The review in Appendix 3 also confirms that there is no reliable evidence indicating
an adverse effect of calcium in itself on bone health, at least at intakes below
2000 mg per day. Overall, epidemiological studies of dairy calcium are consistent
with a protective effect in childhood and adolescence which declines with age
and may be reversed in older adults, particularly in relation to cheese and
to dairy products fortified with retinol.

Appendix 4 reviews the controversy over protein. This review concludes that
there is real advantage in using vegetable protein sources (except grains) rather
than animal protein sources (except milk and yoghurt) to ensure an adequate
protein intake.

Appendix 1: A model for calcium balance

Many of the elements of calcium balance are well known.

Each extra mmol of sodium in the urine is associated with 0.01 extra mmol of
calcium in the urine (Massey, 1996). About 95% of dietary sodium is excreted
in the urine. Short term metabolic loading studies tend to show a slightly weaker
effect, and cross-sectional studies of free-living populations tend to show
a slightly stronger effect. A recent large cross-sectional study (Ho, 2001)
found a coefficient of 0.014 rather than 0.01. Overall, a robust approximation
is given by

DUCa (mmol) = 0.01 * DNa (mmol)

1

where DUCa is the change in urinary calcium and DNa is the change in dietary
sodium.

The effect of protein intake on urinary calcium loss is also well established
(Barzel, 1998; Heaney, 1998; Weaver, 1999). The effect is proportional to the
sulphur content of cysteine and methionine in the diet (though not to the sulphur
content of taurine, which is often excreted intact) and is equivalent to about
0.1 mmol of urinary calcium loss for each mmol of sulphur (S) consumed in the
diet in the form of methionine or cysteine. That is

DUCa (mmol) = 0.1 * S (mmol)

2

S (mmol)= cysteine (g)* 8.3 + methionine (g) * 6.7

3

Heaney (1998) confirms that this effect is seen in cross-sectional studies
as well as short term loading studies, with an observed calcium loss of 0.85
mg per gram of protein. As each gram of protein in a typical diet contributes
about 0.275 mmol of sulphur, the predicted effect of a gram of protein would
be 0.0275 mmol (1.1 mg) of calcium. The short term studies appear to capture
a persistent effect.

At this point consensus fades. Some authors consider the effect of sulphur
to be due to the acid created when sulphur-containing amino acids are metabolised
(2 mmol of acid for each mmol of sulphate). This is made more plausible by the
observation that adding potassium bicarbonate (KHCO3) to the diet causes a decrease
in the excretion of calcium in the urine. However, the extent of the decrease
should be 0.05 mmol of calcium per mmol of bicarbonate if both effects are operating
through the mechanism of net acid excretion. Lemann (1993) provides a very pertinent
summary of short term metabolic loading tests:

DUCa (mmol) = -0.015 * DKHCO3 (mmol)

4

DUCa (mmol) = 0.0 * DNaHCO3 (mmol)

5

DUCa (mmol) = -0.005 * DKCl (mmol)

6

These three relationships can be combined with the effect of sodium (1) and
rearranged to give an equivalent set of equations in terms of the effects of
individual ions:

DUCa (mmol) = -0.005 * DK (mmol)

7

DUCa (mmol) = 0.0 * DCl (mmol)

8

DUCa (mmol) = 0.01 * DNa (mmol)

9

DUCa (mmol) = -0.01 * DHCO3 (mmol)

10

It is striking that the effect of bicarbonate is only -0.01 mmol/mmol while
the effect implied if the influence of protein is mediated by acid is -0.05
mmol/mmol. This counts strongly against the claim that the effect of protein
is governed by the associated acid, and indicates that sulphate and bicarbonate
effects need to be modelled separately.

Sebastian (1994) observes an effect of urinary potassium, provided by the addition
of potassium bicarbonate to the diet, on urinary calcium of -0.022 mmol/mmol.
This is only slightly greater than that indicated by equation 4, particularly
when we note the absorption of dietary potassium to be about 90%, giving an
expected effect of about -0.017. This observation therefore supports the model
above. Sebastian (1994) also notes that earlier work found a reduction in urinary
calcium by potassium citrate but not by sodium citrate. As citrate is metabolised
in the body equivalently to bicarbonate, this observation is also consistent
with the above model.

Breslau (1988) provides data on the effect of varying intakes of cysteine and
methionine on urinary calcium losses. Intakes of most minerals are kept approximately
constant between the different test diets, but there is an 8 mmol per day decrease
in potassium between the soy protein and animal protein diets as well as a 10
mmol per day increase in sulphate from protein. From the model, the sulphate
increase should cause a 40 mg increase in calcium excretion and the potassium
decrease should cause a 5 mg increase in calcium excretion (if associated with
bicarbonate). The predicted increase of 45 mg per day in urinary calcium matches
the observed increase of 47 mg per day well.

Ho (2001) estimates the effect of urinary potassium (about 90% of dietary potassium)
on urinary calcium in a free-living population to be

DUCa (mmol) = -0.012 * DUK (mmol)

11

This substantially exceeds the predicted effect for potassium alone (-0.005),
but the effective provision of bicarbonate from the diet is governed by an ion
balance:

HCO3 = 0.9*K-1.8*0.65*P+0.95*(Na-Cl)+2*0.4*Mg+2*FA*Ca

12

This expression is adapted from Remer (1994, 1995) with the substitution of
slightly different estimates for the fractional absorption of potassium (0.9),
magnesium (0.4), calcium (see below) and phosphorus (0.65). All quantities are
in mmol. Phosphorus is denoted by P and magnesium by Mg. It should be noted
that the term bicarbonate is used to represent any salt that will act as a source
of alkali in the body. The effect of a food on net alkali in the body can be
calculated by subtracting twice the sulphur (equation 3) from the bicarbonate
(equation 12).

In typical modern diets, sodium and chloride are approximately equal and the
dominant factor in providing base is potassium, though its effect is modified
(slightly attenuated) by correlations with other ions in the diet, particularly
phosphate. This means that in practice potassium acts as an approximate proxy
for bicarbonate as well as in its own right. The earlier equations for the effect
of potassium (7) and bicarbonate (10) therefore predict that the apparent effect
of dietary potassium on urinary calcium will be close to -0.015 mmol urinary
calcium per mmol dietary potassium (the sum of the potassium and bicarbonate
effects), which is consistent with equation 11.

Ho (2001) failed to find an effect of dietary protein, evaluated by a food
frequency questionnaire, on urinary calcium excretion. This is unsurprising,
as the estimated protein intake will be much less accurate than the measures
of urinary sodium and potassium. In contrast, Heaney (1998, 2000) used chemically
analysed diets and did find such an effect.

Sodium, potassium, bicarbonate and protein have not been found to affect either
gut losses of calcium or losses of calcium in sweat, so the effect on urinary
loss of calcium appears to be the net effect on calcium losses from the body.
This is in contrast to phosphorus which decreases urinary losses while increasing
gut losses, giving no overall effect on calcium loss (Heaney, 1994).

To complete the model, the dependence of calcium absorption on dietary calcium
intake needs to be quantified. The fractional absorption of calcium from a single
portion (load) of dairy products is given by Weaver (1999) as

This predicts a strong decline in absorption with calcium intake, in a given
meal, but does not lend itself to direct application to calculating the expected
absorption for a given daily intake of calcium. Heaney (2000) notes that the
average fractional absorption is given by

Calcium Fraction Absorbed = 0.22 * (daily calcium in grams) ^ (-0.44)

14

Assuming daily intake to constitute a single load, equations 13 and 14 are
very consistent for calcium intakes above 500 mg per day. This indicates that
the decline in absorption reflects primarily a short term load effect rather
than a longer term adaptation to dietary calcium intake or to calcium losses.

Gonnelli (2001) presents similar relationships, but with slightly lower absorption
at moderate intakes and a more rapid decline in absorption with intake: 0.18*
(daily calcium in grams) ^ (-0.6) for men, and 0.155* (daily calcium in grams)
^ (-0.66) for women. Agnusdei (1998) indicates a fractional absorption of 0.19*
(daily calcium in grams)^(-0.54). This paper will use equation 14, but it should
be noted that this choice may somewhat overestimate calcium absorption, particularly
at high intakes.

However, as calcium intake increases so do urinary losses of calcium and endogenous
faecal losses (loss of calcium from the gut without reabsorption). This means
that the net absorption of calcium is less than indicated above. Recker (1977)
examines the effect of calcium carbonate supplementation on calcium balance
in women with an average age of 57. Calcium balance rises by 72 mg, while calcium
absorption rises by 108 mg, as calcium intake goes from 530 mg to 1480 mg. The
expected absorption for the change in intake is 220 * (1.48 ^0.56 - 0.53^0.56),
that is 120 mg. This prediction is a good match to the observed absorption of
108 mg. However, about a third of the absorbed calcium disappears as increased
losses reduce net absorption by one third compared to gross absorption.

It would be preferable to have data from a number of different calcium supplementation
trials to verify the estimate that one third of absorbed calcium disappears
in extra losses, but such data do not seem to be available. Other sources of
evidence do not allow a better model of calcium dependent losses, though they
do indicate that the scale of the losses is at least as a third of absorbed
calcium. Correlation studies of urinary calcium loss and dietary calcium intake
suggest that about 6 mg of calcium is lost in the urine per 100 mg of calcium
intake (Heaney, 1999). This observed loss will reflect a combination of the
actual effect of calcium on urinary losses and the effect of associated nutrients
in dairy foods, which are accounted for separately in the model above. This
value for calcium-dependent losses may also overestimate losses at higher calcium
intakes, since losses can be expected to decrease as fractional absorption decreases
with increasing calcium intake. Heaney (1994) provides a relationship between
absorption fraction and endogenous faecal losses. Examining this relationship
shows that these gut losses amount to about 10% of absorbed calcium for calcium
intakes between 500 mg and 1500 mg. This indicates that the dominant calcium-dependent
loss is the urinary loss. Both Heaney (1986) and Heaney (1999) indicate that
a simple straight line relationship between absorbed calcium and urinary calcium
explains a high proportion of the variation in urinary losses, but neither paper
states the slope of the fitted line. Even if the slope were given, it would
be influenced by associated nutrients as well as by calcium itself. The available
data do not justify a more precise model than assuming that calcium-dependent
losses are a constant proportion of the absorbed calcium and estimating this
proportion from the results of Recker (1977) to be one third.

The following equation will therefore be used to define the typical absorbed
fraction of calcium, while the increased losses associated with absorbed calcium
will be ignored in calculating the calcium losses.

Where overall daily calcium intake is not known, as in the examination of the
effects of individual foods on calcium balance, the effect on balance will be
evaluated for several different ranges of calcium intake. For example, for an
intake range of 500 mg to 1000 mg, the effective absorption can be estimated
as 0.15 * (1^0.56 - 0.5^0.56) / 0.5, so 0.096 is the expected net fractional
absorption.

The final element for computing the calcium balance is an estimate of calcium
losses when all dietary drivers (calcium, sodium, potassium, protein and bicarbonate)
are zero. Trial and error comparison with known variations in total calcium
losses indicates 2.0 mmol (80 mg) per day to be appropriate.

where FA is the net fractional absorption of dietary calcium and HCO3 is calculated
from equation 12. All quantities are in mmol unless otherwise stated. If data
on cysteine or methionine are missing, but data on protein are available, then
sulphur from protein, in mmol, can be estimated, based on a typical methionine
and cysteine content of protein, as 0.275 * protein (g), instead of using equation
3.

Equation 16 can be used in several ways:

The effect of individual foods on calcium balance can be evaluated by assuming
an appropriate net fractional absorption (FA) for the range of calcium intakes
being considered and evaluating the change in calcium balance due to the mineral
and amino acid content of the food.

For a given dietary composition, the predicted overall calcium balance at
typical net fractional absorption (equation 15) can be calculated.

The required calcium intake to give calcium balance at typical calcium absorption
can be calculated, keeping other nutrients constant.

The required fractional absorption (RFA) to achieve calcium balance can
be calculated by finding the fractional absorption which gives a zero calcium
balance.

The RFA can be divided by the typical fractional absorption from equation
15 to give a normalised required fractional absorption (NRFA).

The NRFA provides a direct measure of how well the overall diet supports bone
health. The lower the NRFA, the better the diet. As variations of more than
a factor of 2 around the absorption predicted from equation 14 are unusual (Heaney,
1986; Heaney, 2000), an NRFA below 0.5 can be considered an excellent assurance
of bone health, while an NRFA above 2 indicates a seriously deficient diet.

This approach can be illustrated by examining four example diets: a typical
Western omnivore diet, an estimated palaeolithic diet, a typical Western vegan
diet, and the diet recommended in the overview. All the diets are based on a
70 kg person consuming 2500 kcal per day. Table 3 also shows the net alkali
contribution of the diet as the difference between the estimated intake of bicarbonate
(equation 12) and the intake of acid from protein. 80% protein absorption is
assumed, with acid equal to twice the sulphur content of the absorbed protein.

Table 3: Diet types, net alkali and calcium balance

The typical omnivore diet has the highest NRFA and the highest calcium loss.
The typical vegan diet and the palaeolithic diet have similar calcium losses,
but because of the higher calcium content in the palaeolithic diet it would
be easier to achieve balance by adaptation mechanisms increasing the fractional
absorption. In contrast, the recommended diet can maintain calcium balance with
fractional absorption below average.

This analysis sheds an interesting light on how our palaeolithic ancestors
maintained healthy bones while consuming large quantities of protein. Despite
a calcium to protein ratio (mg per g) of just 7.5, they are closer than either
typical modern omnivores or vegans to having an adequate diet to support bone
health. Also, the level of base in their diet adequately counters the acidifying
effects of the high protein intake, so blood and urine pH would not be expected
to be low by Western standards. With high levels of physical activity and sun
exposure, it is likely that they had better calcium absorption than is now typical,
further improving bone health. Interestingly, Eaton (1991) shows that almost
all of the palaeolithic calcium intake came from plant sources. Unfortunately,
with the exception of green leafy vegetables, the calcium content of cultivated
fruits and vegetables is often much inferior to that of their wild counterparts
(Milton, 1999), so vegans need to take some care in their dietary choices to
get sufficient calcium, despite exclusive use of plant foods.

Assuming calcium absorption follows equation 15, the required calcium intake
to bring each diet into balance is 2000 mg (omnivore), 2300 mg (palaeolithic),
1200 mg (vegan) and 735 mg (recommended). The corresponding required calcium
to protein ratios of the four diets are 20, 11.5, 24 and 10.5. Heaney (1998)
suggests that a calcium to protein ratio of 20 is adequate for bone health.
While calcium intake and protein intake are two of the strongest influences
on calcium balance, they should not be considered in isolation from sodium,
potassium and bicarbonate.

Promoting bone health points towards increasing calcium and potassium intakes,
moderating protein intake and substantially decreasing sodium intake, compared
with Western standards. This combined strategy has a much better chance of success
than the current (correct but unbalanced) emphasis on calcium as it is less
vulnerable to poor calcium absorption.

Application of the model to specific foods

In calculating calcium balances for the food tables provided in this paper,
food composition data were taken from USDA (1999).

Calcium bioavailability in plants was adjusted where good data were available.
The available calcium in high oxalate plants (spinach, rhubarb, Swiss chard)
was reduced by 80% compared with their nominal content (Weaver, 1997). Kale,
broccoli and Chinese cabbage had available calcium increased by 10% (Weaver,
1997; Benway 1993, Weaver, 1999). Soy products had their calcium bioavailability
reduced by 25%, while other beans had their bioavailability reduced by 50% (Weaver,
1993). The bioavailability of calcium from other foods was not adjusted. The
impact on the calcium balance calculations was substantial for the high oxalate
foods.

As the USDA database does not have data on chloride content, a correction was
made by estimating the excess of chloride over sodium based on McCance and Widdowson
(1991). This adjustment was most significant for meat and fish, for which it
increased the net alkali by 1.5 mmol per 100 g. For whole grains, particularly
brown rice, and for bananas, it decreased the net alkali significantly. The
impact on the calcium balance calculations was negligible.

Validation of the model

The key test of this model is its ability to predict the effects of specific
foods.

One of the most thorough studies of the effect of milk supplementation is Recker
(1985). This study examined the effect on calcium balance of adding 24 oz (670g)
of milk to the diet of 13 postmenopausal women. Calcium balance was measured
one year after supplementation commenced and compared with control subjects
who did not receive extra milk. The one year interval is vital, as it allows
the bone remodelling transient to decay and the body's adaptation mechanisms
to operate, so the measured balance should reflect the long term effect (Heaney,
2001). Calcium intake increased from 680 mg per day to 1470 mg per day. The
observed effect on calcium balance was an improvement of 45 mg per day. Using
the model in Appendix 1, the predicted effect on calcium balance of an extra
670 g of cow's milk, starting from an initial intake of 680 mg per day, is 48
mg per day - a very good match. If the change in calcium intake had been accomplished
using calcium carbonate, the predicted change in balance would have been 65
mg. The difference reflects the losses associated with the milk and confirms
the validity of the model for predicting the effect of dairy products on calcium
balance.

It is also noteworthy that after allowance for calcium losses in sweat (about
50 mg per day), which were not considered in this study, the extra milk changed
the overall calcium balance from a loss of 110 mg per day to a loss of 65 mg
per day. Therefore this study shows that increased calcium consumption from
dairy products up to the highest recommended intake fails to prevent a net loss
of calcium in postmenopausal women. Nonetheless, the 40% reduction in loss observed
is a major improvement.

Another key study is Devine (1995). This study used supplementation of either
calcium lactate gluconate or powdered milk to increase calcium intakes by about
1000 mg per day in two thirds of the study group. The study then examined changes
in bone mineral density over two years. It would have been preferable to start
the bone mineral density measurements after one year to avoid the remodelling
transient, as the remodelling transient will increase the apparent effect of
increased calcium intake beyond what would be sustained after the transient
has passed. Calcium intake was estimated from dietary records and sodium intake
from urinary sodium excretion. Models were then developed by statistical regression
for the effects of calcium, sodium and weight on the change in bone mineral
density at different parts of the skeleton. At two bone sites both calcium and
sodium were found to have a statistically significant effect on rate of change
of bone mineral density, with the effect of 100 mg of calcium being positive
and about two times larger than the negative effect of 100 mg sodium.

The predicted effect of milk at the median calcium intake of 1500 mg is about
5.5 mg per 100 g of milk, or 4.6 mg per 100 mg of milk calcium. The expected
effect of the calcium supplement is about 7 mg per 100 mg of calcium. The predicted
average effect of calcium intake on calcium balance is therefore an increase
of 5.8 mg per 100 mg. The expected effect of sodium on calcium balance is a
decrease of 1.7 mg per 100 mg. The predicted relative effect of calcium and
sodium is therefore 3.4:1, compared with the observed relative effect of about
2:1. This suggests that the model is giving a useful prediction of the observed
effect but may be underestimating the adverse effect of sodium relative to the
beneficial effect of calcium. If we took the coefficient for the effect of sodium
from Ho (2001), the predicted effect of 100 mg of sodium on calcium balance
would become a decrease of 2.4 mg calcium per 100 mg sodium, making the expected
relative effect 2.4:1.

Overall, the degree of consistency between the model and the observations is
very encouraging.

Heaney (1998) argues that increased losses are of limited importance when calcium
intakes are high, as the body will successfully increase calcium absorption
from the gut to compensate for increased losses. There is some truth in this,
in that the body can balance increased losses by absorbing more calcium from
the gut or by absorbing more calcium from bone. However, the success of the
model above in predicting the results of Recker (1985), indicates that the ability
to compensate for increased losses by increased absorption of calcium from the
gut is limited in post-menopausal women and that increased losses due to components
of milk other than calcium are still reflected directly in reduced balance after
a year of adaptation. As noted in Recker (1985), "examination of the correlation
between protein intake and calcium balance with calcium intake held constant
showed a reasonably strong negative correlation". Increased protein intake
was also associated with increased bone resorption after adjustment for calcium
intake. At least for postmenopausal women, the degree of adaptation appears
to be limited, even at high calcium intakes, and the model's predictions of
the net effect of foods on calcium balance appear to be valid.

Appendix 2: The results of long term trials on calcium supplementation

The strongest evidence for the effect of diet on health comes from investigator-controlled
intervention studies of sufficient duration to allow the full effect of the
dietary change to be observed. The fundamental advantage of such studies is
that the results are not distorted (confounded) by associations between individual
dietary choices and other characteristics. However, most intervention trials
on calcium supplementation, either with supplements or with dairy products,
are of such short duration as to be virtually meaningless.

When calcium intake increases substantially the level of PTH in the blood drops
substantially. This reduces the rate of creation of new sites for bone remodelling
- removal of bone by osteoclasts and its replacement by osteoblasts. However,
existing sites continue to be remodelled. This creates a transient imbalance
between osteoclast activity starting at new sites and osteoblast activity continuing
at old sites. The net result is an increase in bone mass over a period ranging
from 6 months in children to 18 months in elderly adults. If supplementation
is stopped, this transient is reversed. If supplementation is continued beyond
the duration of the bone remodelling transient, we see the underlying long term
effect of the supplementation.

Trials of sufficient duration to see the long term effect of supplementation
on bone density, particularly if they also assess impact on fracture incidence,
provide the strongest evidence for the effect of calcium on bone health. The
handful of trials satisfying this criterion are reviewed below.

In comparing the effect of supplementation on changes in bone density relative
to changes in unsupplemented (control) subjects, the rate of change in bone
mineral density in the supplemented subjects will be calculated between two
years after the start of the trial and the end of the trial. The rate of change
in the control subjects will be calculated over the entire trial duration.

There have been three trials of supplementation of calcium, without vitamin
D, lasting for four years and reporting detailed BMD changes in each year of
the study. The rates of change of BMD at various bone sites are summarised below.
For Riggs (1998b) only the rate of change of the supplemented group relative
to the control group can be reported.

Table 4: Results of long term calcium supplementation trials

The results from Reid (1995) and Peacock (2000) are impressive. Both show a
notable reduction in rate of bone loss. This reduction is consistent with the
estimated 40% improvement in calcium balance observed in Recker (1985) on making
a similar shift in calcium intake using milk and the estimated 50% improvement
in calcium balance observed by Recker (1977) using calcium carbonate. Reid shows
a statistically significant reduction in fracture risk. Peacock shows a non-significant
reduction in fracture risk. Recker (1996) also carried out a four year supplementation
trial increasing calcium intake from 450 mg per day to 1650 mg per day using
calcium carbonate. This trial did not report detailed BMD changes year by year,
but did report a significant reduction in fracture incidence in women with a
history of vertebral fractures (7% per year compared with 13% per year). This
adds up to a powerful case for improved bone health with calcium supplementation.

In contrast, Riggs (1998b) shows no benefit and indeed shows a notable loss
of BMD in the spine in the supplemented group compared with the non-supplemented
group over the last two years of the study. Riggs (1998b) showed gains in BMD
of between 1% and 2.5% at the different bone sites over the first two years
of the study. The contrast between the first two years and the second two years
show that eliminating the bone remodelling transient is vital in any analysis
of the effect of a treatment on bone health.

There were differences in the forms of supplements used. Riggs used citrate,
Peacock used citrate malate and Reid and Recker used carbonate. This seems unlikely
to account for the differences in results. The only other obvious difference
is that the supplemented calcium intake in Riggs was higher than in any other
study. It is possible that very high calcium intakes have adverse effects. For
example, calcium intakes above 2000 mg per day combined with high phosphate
intakes could disrupt magnesium absorption (Hardwick, 1990). In Riggs (1998b),
a third of those receiving supplements exhibited greatly increased losses of
calcium in the urine requiring reduction of the supplement dose, indicating
that calcium intake was being pushed beyond desirable levels. Overall, the lesson
from Riggs (1998b) appears to be that calcium intakes beyond 2000 mg per day
should not be encouraged. The observation that many primates have much higher
calcium intakes relative to body size than a human consuming 2000 mg per day
does not provide assurance of safety as these primates consume high levels of
calcium in the context of a diet rich in other minerals, including magnesium
and potassium (Milton, 1999).

Fracture rates have also been reduced using combined calcium and vitamin D
supplementation (Chapuy, 1992; Chapuy, 1994; Dawson-Hughes, 1997). Chapuy (1992,1994)
supplemented 1.2 g of calcium, as calcium phosphate, and 20 micrograms of vitamin
D3 on top of a dietary calcium intake of 500 mg per day and initial calcidiol
levels of about 40 nmol/l. Fracture rate was reduced by 25% over three years.
Dawson-Hughes (1997) supplemented 500 mg of calcium, as calcium citrate malate,
and 17.5 micrograms of vitamin D3 on top of a dietary calcium intake of 700
mg per day and initial calcidiol levels of 75 nmol/l. Non-vertebral fractures
were reduced by 60% over three years. The effect on bone mineral density change
from the end of the first year to the end of the third year was a reduction
in loss of about 0.35% per year, similar to the changes observed with calcium
only.

In contrast, supplementation with vitamin D alone appears to have no significant
effect on fracture risk, in general populations, despite a modest reduction
in bone loss (Lips, 1996; Peacock, 2000). The initial calcidiol levels in Lips
(1996) were 25 nmol/l, so the failure to find a benefit is not explicable by
higher initial levels of calcidiol. This illustrates the importance of tackling
fracture risk on a broad front rather than relying on a single intervention.

Overall, the evidence from intervention trials shows a benefit of increasing
calcium intake to between 1000 and 2000 mg per day, with a possible further
benefit on fracture rate by simultaneously ensuring adequate vitamin D intake.
Greater increases in calcium intake are not supported by existing studies.

The positive effects of calcium supplementation on bone mass and fracture risk
observed in intervention trials make a conclusive case for a benefit of calcium.

Heaney (2000b) states that "no further distinction need be made between
dietary and supplemental sources of calcium" but this assertion is not
well founded. The results of Recker (1985) discussed above indicate that the
effect of milk on calcium balance is about 70% of the effect of its calcium
content, as predicted by the model presented in Appendix 1. The model further
predicts that not all dairy products are alike. At moderate calcium intakes
some cheeses make a modest positive contribution to calcium balance while others
make a negative contribution. For individuals with relatively low calcium absorption,
increased consumption of cheese will generally cause a reduction in calcium
balance, so cheese cannot be expected to act as an effective source of calcium.
Milk and yoghurt are the only dairy products that are likely to improve calcium
balance on calcium intakes above 500mg per day, though even they will be less
effective than many other sources of calcium.

There is only one long term trial of increasing dairy product consumption.
Baran (1990) used unspecified dairy products to increase calcium consumption
from 900 mg per day to 1500 mg per day in premenopausal women. The study showed
a statistically significant difference in vertebral bone density after 30 months.
This was largely due to an apparent 3% drop in BMD in the unsupplemented control
group between 18 months and 30 months. Neither group showed any clear change
in BMD during any other time interval. This pattern does not allow evaluation
of the effect of the intervention after the remodelling transient has ended
as it suggests a higher degree of random error in the measurements than indicated
in the paper or some artefact such as one or more women in the control group
entering menopause: there is no reason to expect premenopausal women to lose
3% of bone mineral density in a year.

There are no experimental data which contradict the expectation, based on the
model in Appendix 1, that increased milk consumption will show less benefit
than expected based on its calcium content and that increased cheese consumption
will show negligible benefit and may indeed have a modest adverse effect on
high risk individuals with relatively low calcium absorption. Results from epidemiological
observations are consistent with this view. These results are discussed in more
detail in Appendix 3.

There is considerable evidence from studies in Asia, such as Hirota (1992),
Hu (1993), Fujiwara (1997) and Lau (2001), that increasing calcium intake to
above 500 mg per day benefits bone health. It would be astonishing if it did
not. In many cases, the additional calcium is provided by milk or other dairy
products. Calcium intakes below 500 mg per day are not consistent with optimal
bone health in any society with an ageing population. Such low calcium intakes
will reduce bone growth during childhood and adolescence, increasing the adverse
effect of later losses. Heaney (2000c) provides many other examples of studies
supporting this conclusion.

The strongest evidence short of intervention studies comes from prospective
studies. In prospective studies, the characteristics of healthy individuals
are recorded prior to observing their health over a number of years. This avoids
bias due to current diet and recollection of past diet being altered by existing
illness. However, such studies are still subject to confounding by associations
between different characteristics of the same individual.

For example, Cumming (1997) found a 50% increased risk of vertebral or hip
fracture in calcium supplement users. This observation contradicts the results
of the intervention trials discussed in Appendix 2. The results were unlikely
to be due to chance, so potential explanations need to be considered. The obvious
explanation is that individuals who perceive themselves to be at high risk of
fracture are more likely to take calcium supplements than individuals with robust
bone structure and no family history of osteoporosis. The higher pre-existing
risk for such individuals then becomes associated with the use of calcium supplements.
Indeed, the authors found "supplement users were more likely than were
nonusers to have a history of falls, fractures or osteoporosis" and considered
this to be the most likely explanation of the observed association. Cumming
(1997) also found a similar, but not statistically significant, association
between both dietary calcium and milk intake and vertebral fracture, which may
be subject to the same explanation.

Holbrook (1988) found an increase of 200 mg of dietary calcium per 1000 kcal
to reduce fracture risk by 40%. This result is consistent with the intervention
studies discussed above.

Most other prospective studies found no significant effect of dietary calcium.
This may, in part, reflect the difficulty of accurately measuring calcium consumption.
It may also reflect the expected difference in effect between different sources
of calcium. There is also likely to be a variable degree of confounding due
to high risk individuals choosing to consume more dietary calcium.

However, Feskanich (1997) found an adverse association between dietary calcium
intake and dairy calcium intake and risk of hip fracture. The highest quartile
of either dietary or dairy calcium intake showed a 100% increase in risk of
hip fracture compared with the lowest quartile. That is, those individuals in
the top 25% by calcium consumption had a risk of fracture twice that of those
in the bottom 25%. There was also a tendency towards an adverse association
between current milk consumption and hip fracture rate, which was statistically
significant for consumption of three or more glasses of milk per day (increased
risk of 75%). Feskanich also found a tendency towards a protective association
from increased childhood milk consumption (decreased risk of 47% for three or
more glasses of milk per day) and no change in risk associated with life-long
high milk consumption.

The trend in these results is as expected from the basic mechanics of calcium
balance set out in the present paper. That is, the benefit of a high calcium
intake is expected to be greatest in children and younger adults, who show better
absorption of calcium. The balance between increased calcium intake and increased
calcium losses with increased dairy product consumption will thus be more favourable
for them than for older adults. The observation that milk consumption is associated
with a less pronounced adverse effect than overall dietary calcium is also unsurprising.
However, the apparent increase in risk of fracture by a factor of two with high
current dietary calcium intake in older adults is not expected from the predicted
effect of dietary calcium sources on calcium balance, which only suggests only
a modest adverse impact of cheese in high risk individuals.

It is possible that the Feskanich study was confounded by high risk individuals
choosing to drink milk and consume more dairy products in an attempt to reduce
risk. This is made more probable as the study was carried out among nurses in
the USA who would be well aware of conventional risk factors for fracture and
influenced by strong promotion of dairy products as a protective measure. This
effect of high risk groups adopting behaviours believed to be protective is
well established and is the reason why the analysis in Feskanich (1997) was
carried out after eliminating calcium supplement users.

This explanation of the observed results is supported by analysing the results
of Feskanich (1998) which differentiated the same study population based on
a genetic risk factor for osteoporosis. Each hip fracture case was matched with
two controls with no fracture, and a genetic test was carried out to unmask
the genetic risk factor. The high risk (BB) genetic subgroup had a twofold increase
in hip fracture risk compared with the other subgroups (Bb and bb). Elevated
risk of fracture was observed only in the BB group with low calcium intake compared
to other groups with low calcium intake.

The results presented in the paper were analysed further by reconstructing
unpublished data on the numbers of study members in each genetic group and calcium
intake level combination. This reconstruction is shown in Table 5.

Table 5: Distribution of cases and controls by genotype and calcium intake

This indicates that 60% of the high genetic risk (BB) group were in the high
calcium intake group. The high risk individuals in the high calcium group show
a modest reduction in risk. That is, unmasking the hidden risk factor indicates
the expected modest protective effect of high dietary calcium (-20%) rather
than an apparent adverse effect when the entire high calcium group is compared
with the low calcium group (+50%). This analysis shows that at least some of
the apparent adverse effect of dietary calcium is due to confounding by high
risk individuals choosing a behaviour believed to be protective. Indeed, it
is possible that a true protective effect of dietary calcium is being masked
by this confounding, though it is likely that any such effect is modest compared
with other risk factors.

It is also possible that some factor in dairy products, other than their mineral
and protein content, is having an adverse effect. Melhus (1998) sheds some light
on this possibility. An analysis of fracture data in a Swedish cohort, adjusting
for multiple nutrients, showed an adverse effect of calcium on fracture risk.
However, Melhus noted an association of fracture risk with intake of retinol
(pre-formed vitamin A). Compared with intakes of less than 500 micrograms per
day, there was a 30% increase in risk for intakes between 1000 and 1500 micrograms
per day and a 95% increase in risk for intakes above 1500 micrograms per day.
Adding retinol to the nutrients being considered eliminated the elevated risk
associated with high calcium intake. This did not, however, eliminate milk consumption
as a risk factor since in Sweden low fat milk contains 450 micrograms of retinol
per litre. This study illustrates the fallacy of regarding milk as equivalent
to calcium. Milk contains many substances and cannot be assumed to act simply
as a calcium source

The association of high retinol intakes with osteoporosis was recently confirmed
in the USA (Feskanich, 2002). An 89% increase in risk of fracture was observed
for total retinol intakes of more than 2000 micrograms per day compared with
intakes of less than 500 micrograms. A 69% increase in risk was found for retinol
intakes from food above 1000 micrograms per day compared with less than 400
micrograms. Beta carotene (converted in the body to vitamin A) was not associated
with excess risk in either Melhus (1998) or Feskanich (2002). The consistency
of results between Sweden and the USA, despite many other differences between
the two countries, strongly supports a true adverse effect of retinol and the
absence of any adverse effect from plant carotenes.

Retinol may have notably influenced the results in Feskanich (1997, 1998),
as US milk which has been fortified with vitamin A (the most common sort) contains
about 600 micrograms of retinol per litre compared with 450 micrograms per litre
in Swedish milk. While the USA does not make extensive use of cod liver oil,
which is a major source of retinol in Scandinavia, there is extensive use of
multivitamins containing retinol. High consumption of milk fortified with vitamin
A will make a significant contribution to total retinol intake and thus to the
likelihood of consuming more than 1500 micrograms per day, the apparent threshold
for a notable adverse effect.

Trends in dairy product consumption in the USA (Miller, 2000) may contribute
strongly to the difference between the results of Holbrook (1988) and Feskanich
(1997). Between 1970 and 1995, milk consumption declined from 320 ml per person
per day to 240 ml per person per day. Whole milk consumption declined by over
60%, while low fat milk consumption increased from less than 20% to more than
60% of total milk consumption. Cheese consumption increased from 13 g per person
per day to 34 g per person per day. Holbrook (1988) was based on a sample from
a community in California, aged 50 to 79 at the start of the study, over the
period 1973 to 1987. Feskanich (1997) was based on US nurses, aged 34 to 59
at the start of the study, over the period 1980 to 1992. Differences in patterns
of consumption of dairy products between the two groups may have been greater
than indicated by national trends, due to differences in age and professional
background.

Full fat milk contains only about 200 micrograms of retinol per litre compared
with about 600 micrograms per litre in fortified low fat milk. The analysis
in the current paper also shows that for people at high risk of osteoporosis
due to relatively low calcium absorption cheese will make calcium balance worse.

Honkanen (2001) also provides an interesting insight into the complexity of
the effect of dietary calcium. High dietary calcium intake (>900 mg per day)
was associated with a modest and non-significant increase in bone loss at the
spine (-0.48% compared with -0.35%) in postmenopausal women who did not regularly
use hormone replacement therapy (HRT). In contrast, high calcium intake was
associated with reduced bone loss (+0.3% compared with -0.05%) in regular HRT
users. As oestrogen treatment makes calcium metabolism more like that of younger
women, this effect is consistent with the prediction in this paper that the
benefit of dairy products for bone health will diminish or even reverse with
age.

Overall, epidemiological studies of dietary calcium are consistent with a protective
effect in childhood and adolescence which declines with age and may be reversed,
particularly for cheese, in older adults at high risk for osteoporosis due to
low calcium absorption. For older adults, the addition of retinol to milk may
introduce an increase in risk greater than any benefit from the calcium provided.

Appendix 4: Protein and bone health

Comparisons between countries (Frassetto, 2000) indicate that an increase in
the ratio of animal to vegetable protein is strongly associated with increased
age-adjusted hip fracture rates in women over the age of fifty. In the original
33 countries analysed, 70% of the variation was explained by animal to vegetable
protein ratio, but the observed effect is likely to have been inflated by confounding.

The effect is reduced when comparisons are restricted to 20 predominantly Caucasian
countries with female disability-adjusted life expectancy over 71, but is still
statistically significant (p=0.014) and explains 25% of the variation of hip
fracture incidence among these countries. In the 20 country analysis carried
out by Stephen Walsh, there was no effect from total protein intake or disability-adjusted
life expectancy, but both were uniformly high (70 to 110 g protein per person
per day and 71 to 77 years life expectancy). In the Graph 1, age-adjusted hip
fracture incidence is plotted against the ratio of animal protein to vegetable
protein (blue diamonds). The purple squares indicate the best straight line
fit obtained by regressing hip fracture incidence against the ratio.

The observed association remained significant when the cluster of four countries
at the top right of the graph (Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Norway) was eliminated
from the analysis. Such comparisons between countries are vulnerable to confounding,
but the results are consistent with a real benefit from consuming a higher proportion
of protein from vegetable sources while maintaining an adequate protein intake.

Frassetto (2000) suggests that this association may reflect the effect of animal
and vegetable protein sources on net alkali consumption. This is a possible
factor, but many concentrated sources of vegetable protein, such as soy and
beans, have a positive impact on calcium balance while meat, fish and eggs have
a negative effect. Milk also has a positive effect, albeit much less than that
of kale and spring greens. Some cheeses have a modestly positive effect, though
the positive effect of cheese disappears at higher overall calcium intakes.
The effect of different protein sources on calcium balance provides a clear
and direct explanation for the observed association, though the balance between
protein from milk and protein from other animal sources would be expected to
alter the observed effect of animal protein considerably.

It should be emphasised that inadequate overall protein intakes can be expected
to adversely affect bone health. However, at any given protein intake bone health
is expected to be favoured by a high ratio of vegetable to animal protein. This
is exactly what was observed by Sellmeyer (2001). Age-adjusted bone mineral
density was positively associated with the ratio of animal to vegetable protein,
but on adjustment for total protein intake and other factors the apparent relationship
was reversed, though this was not statistically significant. The picture on
hip fracture incidence was more straightforward, with the age and weight adjusted
risk of fracture rising with animal protein intake and falling with vegetable
protein intake. Bone loss was observed to increase with increasing ratio of
animal to vegetable protein even before adjustment for total protein.

Feskanich (1996) found a 25% increase in risk of forearm fracture as animal
protein intake rose from 50 g per day or less to 80 g per day or more. There
was no apparent effect of animal protein on hip fracture risk. Change in vegetable
protein intakes from less than 12 g per day to 20 g per day or more showed no
apparent effect.

However, considering only Sellmeyer (2001) and Feskanich (1996) gives a misleading
impression of the balance of evidence.

Hannan (2000) found reduced bone loss at the hip and spine over four years
in individuals in the highest quartile of animal protein intake, whether measured
in grams per day or as a percentage of calories. Kerstetter (2000) found BMD
of the femur to be 3.5% higher in the top quartile of protein intake compared
with the bottom quartile. No distinction was made between animal and vegetable
protein. Munger (1999) found a 70% reduction in hip fracture risk in the highest
quartile of animal protein intake compared with vegetable protein intake.

Heaney (1998) reviews studies on protein intake and bone health up to 1998
noting that 3 showed and adverse effect, three showed a beneficial effect and
two showed no significant effect. Heaney argues that the effect of protein on
bone will be modified substantially by the associated ratio of calcium to protein,
suggesting that there should be no adverse effect of protein on bone if about
20 mg of calcium are consumed for each gram of protein. That is, the effect
of animal protein will depend on the ratio of high calcium dairy products to
other animal protein sources. It is also likely that the effect of protein will
be different as protein intake increases to adequate levels and then moves beyond
such levels. There is some evidence that protein requirements may be higher
in older adults than in younger adults (Hannan, 2001).

Heaney (2001b), in an editorial on Sellmeyer (2001), argues that there is no
valid scientific reason for making a distinction between animal and vegetable
protein. Heaney notes correctly that grain protein is higher in sulphur amino
acids than many meat proteins. However, the concentrated plant proteins that
would be used to increase protein intake on a vegan diet, such as soy products
and beans, are relatively low in sulphur amino acids. Moreover, other components
of plant sources of protein, particularly potassium and bicarbonate, also exert
an influence on calcium balance and, with the exception of grains, this influence
is markedly in favour of vegetable sources of protein.

The evidence on protein strongly supports an overall benefit for bone health
of higher protein intakes, provided a good calcium balance is maintained and
the diet is not excessively acidic. The ratio of animal to vegetable protein
does not adequately capture these provisos, so conflicting results are to be
expected. Replacing protein from meat, fish or eggs with protein from milk or
yoghurt will improve calcium balance. Eliminating all animal proteins and living
almost exclusively on grains can be expected to be harmful. Replacing meat,
fish or eggs with soy and other legumes will benefit bone health, as will replacing
milk with green leafy vegetables.

New (2000): Susan A New et al., American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, 2000; 71: 142-151, Dietary influences on bone mass and bone metabolism:
further evidence of a positive link between fruit and vegetable consumption
and bone health?

Peacock (2000): Munro Peacock et al., Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
and Metabolism, 2000; 85: 3011-3019, Effect of calcium and 25OH vitamin D3 dietary
supplementation and bone loss at the hip in men and women over the age of 60.

Recker (1985): Robert R Recker and Robert P Heaney, The American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1985; 41: 254-263, The effect of milk supplements
on calcium metabolism, bone metabolism and calcium balance.